
Texas Teen's Pig Eddie Wins Grand Champ, Sells for $505K
A 15-year-old freshman's months of dedication just paid off in the most spectacular way at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. His champion pig sold for a world record $505,000, breaking the previous record by $4,000.
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Landry Mabry stood in the arena on March 19, watching his all-white pig Eddie beat out 2,200 other pigs to win grand champion at the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. The Crawford High School freshman had just achieved what most livestock exhibitors only dream about.
The victory came after months of relentless work. Landry and his family brought Eddie home last fall, and the teenager fed his pig twice daily, cleaned pens, trained him to walk, and gave baths three to four times a week. There were no days off.
"It is a tedious process. You can't skip a day," said Chyla Mabry, Landry's mother and an agriculture teacher at Crawford High School. "They are fully reliant on us to take care of them."
The family named Eddie after a character in "Christmas Vacation" because of his silly, sweet personality. The pig had one blue eye and gray patches over his eyes that made him look like he was wearing a mask.
When auction day arrived on March 20, Eddie sold for $505,000, shattering the previous world record of $501,000. The Houston Rodeo keeps most proceeds for scholarships, with Landry receiving about 10 percent for his own scholarship fund.

A video of Chyla rushing to hug her son after the grand champion announcement went viral with over a million views. "I'm so proud of you," she tells him through tears in the clip, which the Houston Rodeo captioned "The moment every parent dreams of."
Why This Inspires
This story reminds us that dedication and daily commitment still matter. Landry didn't just get lucky with a genetically superior pig. He showed up every single morning and evening for months, missing baseball practices and making sacrifices most teenagers wouldn't consider.
His mother put it perfectly: "Every early morning, late night, every sacrifice, every missed baseball practice was worth it." Success at this level requires both the right foundation and the willingness to do the unglamorous work when nobody's watching.
Even better, Landry's younger brother Kenton, 13, also qualified for the Houston sale with his own pig, showing this family knows how to raise champions in more ways than one.
For a Texas family committed to excellence, the stars aligned when preparation met opportunity.
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Based on reporting by Google News - World Record
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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